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Some ideas feel too simple to matter—until the data proves they move the needle on survival. We sit down with Dr. Jordan Gebhardt from Kansas State University to unpack how feed form, small management choices, and genetics combine to cut nursery removals and mortality. From creep feed strategy to the surprising power of very large pellets, we explore why pigs eat more when feed doubles as a social stimulus and how that early intake protects against the post-weaning dip.
We break down practical tools producers can apply right away: when and how to use mat feeding to accelerate feed discovery, what gruel feeding frequency actually changes, and how to prioritize labor for the moments that count. Jordan shares fresh research showing no advantage for four-times-daily gruel feeding over twice daily, freeing up time for better pen-walks and faster fallback identification. We also cover a head-turning genetic angle: divergently selected Duroc sire lines respond differently to weaning stress, with early-maturing lines eating sooner and losing less weight, while later-maturing lines make their gains in finishing. It’s a clear reminder to align genetic choices with system goals and health pressure.
The biggest unlock may start upstream. Roughly two-thirds of wean-to-finish survivability variation traces back to the sow farm—colostrum, health status, and gilt development set the stage long before the nursery. When teams pair a better weaned pig with consistent basics—clean water, fresh feed, dry floors, and engaged caretakers—mortality drops. If you want a playbook that’s proven, practical, and ready for tomorrow’s chores, this conversation delivers. If you learn something useful, follow the show, share it with your team, and leave a quick review so more producers can find it.
By Feedstuffs5
88 ratings
Some ideas feel too simple to matter—until the data proves they move the needle on survival. We sit down with Dr. Jordan Gebhardt from Kansas State University to unpack how feed form, small management choices, and genetics combine to cut nursery removals and mortality. From creep feed strategy to the surprising power of very large pellets, we explore why pigs eat more when feed doubles as a social stimulus and how that early intake protects against the post-weaning dip.
We break down practical tools producers can apply right away: when and how to use mat feeding to accelerate feed discovery, what gruel feeding frequency actually changes, and how to prioritize labor for the moments that count. Jordan shares fresh research showing no advantage for four-times-daily gruel feeding over twice daily, freeing up time for better pen-walks and faster fallback identification. We also cover a head-turning genetic angle: divergently selected Duroc sire lines respond differently to weaning stress, with early-maturing lines eating sooner and losing less weight, while later-maturing lines make their gains in finishing. It’s a clear reminder to align genetic choices with system goals and health pressure.
The biggest unlock may start upstream. Roughly two-thirds of wean-to-finish survivability variation traces back to the sow farm—colostrum, health status, and gilt development set the stage long before the nursery. When teams pair a better weaned pig with consistent basics—clean water, fresh feed, dry floors, and engaged caretakers—mortality drops. If you want a playbook that’s proven, practical, and ready for tomorrow’s chores, this conversation delivers. If you learn something useful, follow the show, share it with your team, and leave a quick review so more producers can find it.

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